blase — If you describe someone as blasé, you mean that they are not easily impressed, excited, or worried by things, usually because they have seen or experienced them before.
blaze — When a fire blazes, it burns strongly and brightly.
braise — When you braise meat or a vegetable, you fry it quickly and then cook it slowly in a covered dish with a small amount of liquid.
glaze — to furnish or fill with glass: to glaze a window.
graze — to touch or rub something lightly, or so as to produce slight abrasion, in passing: to graze against a rough wall.
hays — John Milton, 1838–1905, U.S. statesman and author.
haze — vagueness or obscurity, as of the mind or perception; confused or vague thoughts, feelings, etc.: The victims were still in a haze and couldn't describe the accident.
maize — (chiefly in British and technical usage) corn1 (def 1).
mays — the fifth month of the year, containing 31 days.
maze — a confusing network of intercommunicating paths or passages; labyrinth.
nays — and not only so but; not only that but also; indeed: many good, nay, noble qualities.
pais — outside of court; without legal proceedings.
phase — any of the major appearances or aspects in which a thing of varying modes or conditions manifests itself to the eye or mind.
phrase — Grammar. a sequence of two or more words arranged in a grammatical construction and acting as a unit in a sentence. (in English) a sequence of two or more words that does not contain a finite verb and its subject or that does not consist of clause elements such as subject, verb, object, or complement, as a preposition and a noun or pronoun, an adjective and noun, or an adverb and verb.
strays — to deviate from the direct course, leave the proper place, or go beyond the proper limits, especially without a fixed course or purpose; ramble: to stray from the main road.
lyonnaise — (of food, especially fried potatoes) cooked with pieces of onion.
malaise — a condition of general bodily weakness or discomfort, often marking the onset of a disease.
morays — any of numerous chiefly tropical eels of the family Muraenidae, having porelike gill openings and no pectoral fins.
noun phrase — a construction that functions syntactically as a noun, consisting of a noun and any modifiers, as all the men in the room who are reading books, or of a noun substitute, as a pronoun.
post chaise — a four-wheeled coach for rapid transportation of passengers and mail, used in the 18th and early 19th centuries.
rephrase — to phrase again or differently: He rephrased the statement to give it less formality.
verb phrase — a group of words including a verb and its complements, objects, or other modifiers that functions syntactically as a verb. In English a verb phrase combines with a noun or noun phrase acting as subject to form a simple sentence.
anal phase — Psychoanalysis. the second stage of psychosexual development during which the child, usually at two years of age, becomes preoccupied with defecation.